Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Sylvain Pronovost
Institute of Cognitive Science, Carleton University
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Introduction
Ethics has for long been a privileged area of human activity untouched by
deterministic and materialistic claims as its particular subject matter is essentially
praxeological, that is the moral inclinations and conducts of people. With
respects to free will and self-determination, moral epistemology has undergone
significant changes over the centuries of occidental thought on moral judgments
and their particular normative aims. The problem is, under the circumstances of a
diversity of intellectual schemes and practices as observed worldwide by
scientifically inclined thinkers, establishing morality on strong foundations and
assuring a coherent scheme with metaphysical and epistemological
presumptions became apparently harder as time has gone by. This has led to a
polarization between two radical theories on the status of judgments of values, in
the diverse avatars of absolutism and relativism.
Gilbert Harman (1985), fascinated with the ongoing allegiances towards
either radical claims (and noting that a rare few were uncommitted) and with
apparently no accepted grounds for a settlement, has reoriented the issue on a
broader epistemological conflict between naturalism and autonomous ethics. My
observations have led me to agree with this argument, but also under an
orthogonal perspective, that is, the relativism and absolutism conflict generally
revolves respectively around a cultural and external account of the nature of
morality versus a rational and internal account of moral principles. On the first
account, ethics are immanent to social and cultural interactions, and morality
seems incommensurable, therefore voiding the possibility of there being
universal moral truths. On the absolutist side, ethics are (almost) transcendent, a
priori to human activity, and through rational endeavors it is possible to grasp or
develop universal and general principles of morality that are invariably true.
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I hold that the debate on ethical relativism is reductive. It is too
preoccupied with the dual commitments of naturalization contra autonomy on one
level, and drawing upon it being externally (empirically) versus internally
(rationally) determined on another level, clouding a deeper disagreement in the
form of a misinterpretation of the very concept of relativism. I will therefore
dedicate the first part of this essay to a reinterpretation, or clarification, of what it
is for a belief or a set of beliefs to be held in a relativistic framework, inspired by
analogical empirical and formal systems of beliefs. In a second section, I will
argue against the possibility of an autonomous study of ethics, drawing upon the
debate on normative and descriptive clauses. I will also assess the coherence
and fallibility of an autonomous research program, notably by pointing out its
underlying metaphysical and epistemological commitments. In the following
section, I will focus on the opposite view, the naturalization of ethics, and how it
follows naturally from contemporary metaphysical and epistemological beliefs
and endeavors, aiming to adjust to preoccupations of psychological realism,
empirical adequacy and theoretical constraints. Finally, following a massive
quantity of research in the interdisciplinary sciences of cognition, I will offer an
account of what type of constraints and reliable sources of information
naturalized and relativistic ethics may draw upon in the pursuit of moral inquiries.
A definition of relativism
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relativement aux sujets et aux contextes qui les produisent, leur prtention
lobjectivit et luniversalit tant remplace par une validit
psychologiquement, historiquement, ou socialement limite.
What is fascinating about relativism is the age-old claim (of Greek origin,
as this problem has been haunting at least the Occidental part of our world for
quite a while) that it is a paradoxical dead end, an undesirable logical
troublemaker to which we can not ascribe a truth value because its form (an
absolute claim) necessarily contradicts its content (about nothing being
absolute). The claim of relativism being, prima facie, paradoxical, is roughly as
follows:
All statements / theories are relative.
Following pop culture in its inexorable generalization, or what scholars
sometimes dub folk science or naive science, this already mind boggling
puzzle of logic as gone as far as
Everything is relative.
which is truly blown out of proportion. Now, one might be tempted to abandon the
relativistic outlook of knowledge for its hopeless tone, or either champion it or
rebuke it in this very narrow form (to my sense, which I will justify in what
follows). Literature is prolific about the inadmissibility or the inevitability of
relativism, from theoretical knowledge to praxeological knowledge, from physics
(even mathematics) to ethics. Lets be honest: in this crude form, either relativism
dooms us all to the underdeterminacy of a referential framework, undermining
the very concept of truth and mutual agreement on any statements or course of
action in a world of caeteris paribus (all things being equal) or petitio principii
(begging the principle or motive), OR relativism is inadmissible, has to be
admonished and the alternative is to look to the stars in search of universals.
Well, I may have a romantic point of view of the ongoing debate, that is,
the one between relativists and absolutists, but they leave a bitter sense of
dichotomic, binary concepts when it comes to the study of knowledge. In both
camps, one ought to find some clause that will threaten to shake the edification
of its being a very radical thesis on the nature of knowledge. One good trick of
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the philosophical trade, although it may be inadequate or misleading, is to
reassess the problem in its very definition. Conceptual analysis, as it is, may be
instrumental not only in solving problems of theoretical nature, but also in
assessing if a problem has been correctly formulated, or in a more extreme
measure, if it is really a problem at all. My claim here will be that relativism, along
with the formulation in which it is usually presented, are semantically wrong,
misleading us to other incorrect claims and edifying theories and counter-theories
that hold on a misinterpretation. I will also discuss in the next section on the
metaphysical and epistemological commitments that entail to such a
misinterpretation, which are radical claims about knowledge and the world that
are themselves controversial and questionable.
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includes relative clauses is so up to a certain level of regression both in
mathematics and in logic, namely to the level of axioms. Hence, we may have yet
to progress with caution when we claim that formal systems, in their descriptive
role, are arbitrary. Internally, even formal sciences have an upper bound of
arbitrariness, and axioms are not relative clauses.
Yet another journey into relative claims or even relative systems of beliefs
has been available for the best part of the twentieth century in a sadly
misinterpreted theory of mythical proportions: the theory of relativity developed
by Einstein (1918) in its two avatars: general and special theories of relativity. In
an obviously (reductive) general and nonmathematical way, here is what it says:
in simplest terms, the theory of relativity is an approach to the
measurement and study of space and time. The theory assumes that findings
are based upon the relation of the frame of reference to the objects measured
both [theories] hold that certain physical quantities, formerly
considered objective, are actually relative to the state of motion of the
observer.
Now, history has demonstrated how shamefully misunderstood have been
Einsteins claims about the nature of our knowledge of the physical universe.
Following the paradoxical interpretation of relative clauses within a system of
beliefs or even the relativity of wholly articulated systems of beliefs between
themselves, it is as if Einsteins work had reinforced the naive conception of
relativism: everything is relative. In the realm of physics, peoples source of
inspiration for the reinforcement of this belief comes from a troubled
understanding of the following: observational statements about motion and
position of objects are dependent on the measure involved and the status of the
observer. Therefore, macrophysics being a set of descriptions of the behavior of
magnitudes dependent on one another, its all relative. Everything is relative.
Wrong. Naive / wrong physics lead to a larger set of naive / wrong beliefs
reinforcing the archaic relativist claim, just as its paradoxical formal structure is a
false problem which finds its source in an apparent ambiguity of the semantics of
relativism. We will explore my claim about the relativity of descriptions in the
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empirical realm of physics first, and then the controversial claim that I just made
about the semantics of relativism.
I do not want to drown the reader in empirical details of highly technical
and abstract nature, but here is the proper treatment of the theory of relativity, as
reductive as possible:
when we have the above object moving, it will have a certain amount
of energy. Einstein argued, the only way we can insure that it cannot be
accelerated indefinitely, is if there is a universal equivalence between mass and
energy. The more energy an object has, the heavier it will be. When we speed it
up a little bit it becomes a bit heavier, and so it also becomes a bit harder to
speed it up further. In fact, the closer we are to the speed of light, the larger the
force is needed to accelerate the object; an infinite force is needed to speed up a
material object to the speed of light: it never happens!
[on general relativity] Special relativity made the velocity of light a limit
for all causal processes and required revision of Newtons theory of gravity as an
instantaneous action at a distance
A philosophical motive for the general theory was to extend the relativity
of motion. Einstein saw special relativitys restricted class of equivalent reference
frames as an epistemological defect, and he sought laws that would apply to
any frame [after the physicalist justification] Thus not only velocity and rest, but
motion in general would be relative.
The curvature of space is real and is generated by the mass of the
bodies in it. Correspondingly the curvature of space determines the trajectories
of all bodies moving in it. The Einstein equations are the mathematical
embodiment of this idea. Their solutions predict, given the initial positions and
velocities of all bodies, their future relative positions and velocities. In the limit
where the energies are not too large and when the velocities are significantly
below c the predictions of Einstein's equations are indistinguishable from those
obtained using Newton's theory. At large speeds and/or energies significant
deviations occur, and Einstein's theory, not Newton's, describes the
observations.
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Conclusion: relativity is a strong claim about empirical descriptions
concerning macrophysics that misled many people to the wrong belief that these
descriptions belong to a relativistic theory of macrophysical phenomena, and
physics being a core discipline as it is, part of the hard sciences of nature, this
misconception is reinforced ad hominem in support of the archaic claim of
relativism. Here is what Ian Stewart (1990), mathematician at the University of
Warwick, says about the general treatment of the concept of relativity, [following
a discussion on the concept of chaos in mathematics]... The same happened to
Einsteins relativity theory which was widely used in the United States as an
excuse for social inequality. Everything is relative, as Einstein says, became the
chant. Not so. The most interesting thing that Einstein said is that some things,
notably the speed of light, are not relative.
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factual basis of this knowledge. That is not what I believe to be so. My claim is
simply that in every body of knowledge, a set of core beliefs are taken as such as
postulates or axioms for the rest of the system. Their truth might be challenged
and we may turn up with better theories, but this is not a sufficient argument
against realism, nor is the thesis of the inscrutability of the reference.
My point can be resumed as follows: relativism is an interesting claim
about knowledge, but misunderstood in its very semantics. As many archaic
dichotomies have been progressively overthrown in favor of mediate solutions or
entirely different ones over the history of science, so has the false problem of
absolutism versus relativism got to give up. Perhaps we should think of it as a
spectrum, with two poles being a set of justified true beliefs on one end, and a
larger set of relative clauses that hold only in virtue of the former on the other
end. We will explore the archaic alternative views of knowledge on which the
modern theatre of relativism and absolutism clashes take place in the following
section, and make sense of the precedent claim about a reconstruction of the
concept of relativism in the context of ethics and its dependence on empirical
sciences. It will become apparent that the epistemological and metaphysical
foundations of the rift between absolute and relative knowledge are responsible
for the complications that have generated an even larger misconception, the
controversial normative and descriptive divide.
We will follow Mark Johnson (1993, 1998) and Robert Audi (1998)s
accounts of the epistemological debacle over ethics. Why is there so much
resistance from the study of ethics to delve into the realm of the empirical in
search of wisdom ? From the empiricist claims of Hume (1739) to the rationalist
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convictions of Kant (1797), quite opposite views of the world, spun forth a great
epistemological gap over the status of empirical and moral claims. The is/ought
dichotomy appeared to Hume as quite a natural state of the world. In his view,
facts and values were totally independent of each other, and there was no
justification for moral philosophers to admit descriptive statements of factuals into
the realm of normative statements of values. Kant viewed the sphere of ethics as
an independent realm of moral laws, universals and necessary truths that were
available to the scrutiny of pure reason. Empirical lore was available through
synthetic and a posteriori scrutiny, whereas moral principles would be available
through the exercise of rationality alone.
But it probably was G.E. Moore (1903)s position that undermined later
endeavors in being even interested in a possible reunion of the practical and the
empirical. His radical view held that moral concepts are non analyzable in
empirical terms and possess nonnatural properties of experience (by contrast
with analyzable and natural properties of objects and states of the world available
to perception and sensation). Johnson notes that Moore never really explained
what was meant by nonnatural properties. On Moores account, moral judgments
and explanations can not draw upon empirical references, such as in the
determination of the concept of what is good. He named the position of
attempting to relate descriptive references to the development of normative
clauses the position of naturalistic fallacy.
To sum up these views, moral philosophy ought to be about rational
analysis and normative claims, since values are of another nature than that of
facts. But what then, might I deservingly ask, are the tools and trade of moral
thinking ? If by reason alone, it aims to be rule- or law-like internal coherence.
Autonomous ethics then revolves around conceptual analysis, formal exercise
and evaluation of concise situations (or counter examples). It therefore seems
that ethics appeal to a rational, logical exercise of the mind in order to produce or
discover evidential truths of universal, normative essence. This is a bold gesture,
but before we follow up on the other side of the normative-descriptive divide, that
is in the realm of the dependency of ethics on empirical matters, we may want to
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explore a certain number of difficulties that are internal to such a claim of the
autonomy of a rational view of ethical deliberation.
The twentieth century dealt with some lethal attacks on the workings of
deductive logic, following some mathematical and logical theorems that
successfully repudiated the apparent universality of logical systems such as first-
order predicate logic and all of the non classical deployments of propositional
calculus, such as modal logic and polyvalent systems. The pretense of
universality and internal coherence of these avatars of logic was shattered with
theses on incompleteness and undecidability within formal systems (Gdel 1931,
Church 1936). Whether these considerations have any bearing on moral
philosophy should be carefully weighted, since the use of formal-deductive
judgments involving values rarely reduce to classical propositional calculus,
mostly calling upon modal systems. Logic is an articulate representation of the
internal coherence of arguments, and as such is really helpful for human
knowledge, but it is fallible.
An epistemological prejudice
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my sense, justification of moral judgments, in order to claim independence from
the dominion of empiricism, has to have an aprioristic account of justification.
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external determination of moral judgments. Externalism is very important for the
naturalistic enthusiast. After so much pressure from the naturalistic fallacy in the
making of modern moral philosophy, moral psychology did not have much to say
about normativity. John Dewey (1922) tried his best to bring back empirical
science into the realm of moral philosophy, to the extent of claiming that
empiricism was the core of ethics. His point was that since ethics concern human
nature directly, empirical claims on the body, mind and social organization of
moral agents are not only pertinent but indeed essential to moral exploration.
But according to Johnson (1998), Dewey was ignored by Anglo-Saxon
analytic philosophy of morals. In the later half of the twentieth century though, as
empiricism and naturalistic epistemology have taken over the sciences of the
individual and the social, moral theorists have grown to be even more concerned
with the normative-descriptive dichotomy.
The tide as turned, and empiricism is back in the theatre of morals. The
later half of the twentieth century saw the birth and rise of interdisciplinary fields,
where sciences met to further global and specific research programs by the
means of collaboration. One dominant current as been that of the cognitive
sciences, from their early endeavors under the label of cybernetics to the now
immensely prolific areas of artificial and biological intelligence. But cognitive
sciences are not only a diversity of areas of research, they are also a set of
epistemological and metaphysical claims, a variety of methodologies, and an
encompassing thesis over the life sciences and the sciences of individuals and
societies: the thesis that all biological, and certain artificial entities, from their
inner workings to their associations, can be heuristically described and explained
through the concepts of information processing, intelligence, and the like.
Owen Flanagan (1991) has voiced an elementary concern to the study of
ethics, in light of the importance of the cognitivist approach in contemporary
empirical research programs, that he formulated as the principle of Minimal
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Psychological Realism: make sure when constructing a moral theory or
projecting a moral ideal that the character, decision processing, and behavior
prescribed are possible, or are perceived to be possible, for creatures like us
(my emphasis in italics). As Johnson notes, the principle may sound innocuous,
but its implications and consequences are radical in the context of ethics. It
places normative ethics in a direct, and necessary relationship with what we
know about the mind, and behavior of moral agents. And that is precisely what
cognitive sciences purports to study. The philosophical prejudice against the
descriptive and empirical cognitive sciences is here under trial, and supporters of
autonomous ethics will here demand justification. Well, I will try to demonstrate,
with the help of philosophers and cognitive scientists who have had a say in the
relevance of their endeavors to the field of ethics, that the evidence supporting
the claim of the necessity of grounding ethics in cognition is not only convincing,
it is a lethal blow to any pretense of the autonomy of any area of knowledge
about human life. And then, I will proceed to demonstrate the relativity of ethics
not exclusively to culture (as anthropologists would have it, like Benedict, 1934),
but to a larger scheme of constraints, from the biological to the social, under the
guidance of cognitive sciences results.
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the guidance of a transparent and all-encompassing reason, where all of these
concepts were taken to be literal, clearly defined and available to all sufficiently
rational agents.
Those theories are psychologically unrealistic. They are doomed to the
status of idealistic outlooks on what normative morals should be. We have
already discussed the reasons for the origins of the normative and descriptive rift,
and it will become more and more apparent, as we progress, that maybe the
denial of the relevance of empirical research on cognition was a bad move for
ethics. So, where do we start ? Johnson says that from the perspective of the
cognitive sciences, then, the most fundamental challenge is to show that the
alleged is/ought split is mistaken I have dubbed the departure from
autonomous ethics the autonomous ethics fallacy, in a (admittedly sarcastic)
tribute to Moore.
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My point about criteria is that its overrated, out (of fashion) and obsolete.
Only formal systems may carry such a strong commitment on their design, by
their purely artificial and descriptive nature and function. Empirical sciences, up
to and including economics, have been influenced by many thinkers concerned
with questions on teleology (Dawkins 1986, Dennett 1995, 2003, Millikan 1987),
complexity and determinism (Lewin 1993, Coveney & Highfield 1995, Stewart
1990, Gleick 1988, Kauffman 1993) and rule-based systems (Nash 1997,
Axelrod 1984, Simon 1956, Newell 1990). These endeavors have changed the
face of the epistemology of science as well as its metaphysical foundations, and
contemporary research from even mathematics to physics to all of the life
sciences have departed from the metaphysically charged concept of criterion to
embrace that of constraint.
The concept of constraint has a lighter touch in terms of metaphysical
commitment. It doesnt place us in a world of ontological density (where
everything from ideas to objects that you can think of are granted reality a priori),
but rather in one of ontological propensity (where there may been something out
there, from concepts to abstract entities to material ones). Note how it is also
epistemologically lighter, in its prudent realism, for we are committed to the
limitations of not only ontology, but above all, our knowledge of the world. Our
claims are weaker with constraints, but at least they do not commit us to idealistic
schemes of ill-fated grandeur, of the likes of kantianism and utilitarianism. As
such, the cognitive sciences-inspired individuals have a better understanding of
what Johnson means when he writes we must examine the ways in which
cognitive science constrains moral theory, and later for the most part,
results from the cognitive sciences available to date function primarily to set
constraints on the nature of a psychologically and cognitively realistic morality
(my emphasis in both quotes).
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Moral law has been a dominant ethical model from ancient Greece to
religious thought, to absolutist views of the like of intuitionism, rationalism and
even rawlsian judicial thought. Morality is regarded as a system of universal
moral laws or rules, discernible by human reason, and directly applicable to the
kinds of concrete moral situations that people encounter in their lives writes
Johnson (1993). He then emphasizes that cognitive research on
conceptualization and reasoning is of direct consequence to the viability of moral
law theories. These theories hold on premises such as universality and explicit
rules, and are incompatible with cultural and historical relativism. Drawing upon
George Lakoff (1987), Paul Churchland (1995), and Amos Tversky and Daniel
Kahneman (1974), we have sufficient results from cognitive research to
undermine the moral law conception, as well as the autonomous and rational
premises that support it.
There is an impressive quantity of research on the nature of concepts and
categorization. Abstract concepts have been demonstrated to possess a fuzzy
nature, by having no clear boundaries and a gradient structure. Thus are
concepts ambiguous at best, and our categorizations under such concepts does
not obey a classical (featural, definitional) semantic theory, but rather some form
of prototype- or exemplar- based processing (Rosch 1978, Smith & Medin 1999).
Moreover, research specifically about moral concepts has shown that moral
prototypes or other non classic conceptual structures result from a radial
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construction, by exposition to metaphorical and functional relations to other
category members. As if it was not enough, those abstract moral concepts being
defined by sets of metaphors, they exhibit inconsistencies and contradictions
among themselves. As Johnson emphasizes, if our fundamental moral
concepts are defined by multiple and possibly inconsistent conceptual
metaphors, then the literalist picture of moral thinking [] cannot be correct."
To complicate things further, it also follows that our reasoning about moral
issues can not be deductive (with exceptions of simplicity in the correspondence
between a situation that would follow literally from a line of moral reasoning).
Moral reasoning is therefore an exploration of correspondence between
metaphorical extensions of prototypical moral situations to atypical ones.
Johnson notes that it does not commit us to the exclusion of moral principles, but
theses principles are not univocal and absolute, they are idealized strategies
modulated by experience and categorization via prototypical concepts of
metaphorical structure.
One line of cognitive research has demonstrated that we frame our
reasoning. Our concepts and the relations they hold among themselves are
context-dependent. A moral problem in a situation has many different outlooks
and solutions depending on prior or subordinate clauses, by analogy to research
on decision-making and problem solving in cognitive sciences. Frame
dependence is incompatible with moral law theories and moral fundamentalism.
As a corollary source of reinforcement for the frame-dependent view, there is a
significant body of work that questions the ability of rational agents to make
good probabilistic judgments of the sort required by an economic conception of
rationality writes Johnson. The subject matter here is psychological work on
the use of heuristics and models of decision-making where risk is involved. As
Johnson notes, moral theory draws upon a conception of rationality that surfaced
in classic economics, where agents use their reason, in light of available
information, in an optimal way, to assess their interests and the consequences of
those rational choices.
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This conception has been proven time and again to be quite unrealistic
psychologically, and the sciences of economics have ruled it out a long time ago,
always eager to borrow on empirical research to further their ends. It is
commonly held nowadays that real agents (as opposed to ideal agents) have
biases and limitations, or again constraints, on their so-called rational choices.
Among the relevant empirical results, people have been shown to be strongly
influenced by the framing of risk assessment, being risk-averse in deliberation
about gains and risk-seeking when losses are concerned, without regards to the
actual objective calculation in terms of optimality. Principles such as satisficing,
as opposed to optimality, and heuristics use, as opposed to maximum
information-oriented decisions, have undermined and replaced the classical
rational perspective in economics and psychology, and ethics should know better
than to stick with ghosts.
On emotions
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states, in complex physiologically and neurologically constrained processes.
Research results on cortical lesions and neuropathological afflictions have shown
that reason and emotions are interdependent in the minds endeavors to achieve
judgments of practical and moral propensity. A very important empirical matter
here is the demonstration by neurosciences that reason is directly dependent on
its embodiment, a radical turn in the study of rationality from a cognitive direction.
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examination standards of those early studies, thus biasing a claim that was
already built-in the method.
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end, too variegated and multipurpose to be analyzable in terms of a simple two-
orientation scheme even blended together writes Flanagan.
Conclusions
Much has been said above on the very large issues of ethical relativism
and how to deal with classical preconceptions of epistemological issues on moral
thought. But in both ways of dealing with a vast area of knowledge and pointing
out to specific issues within them, I have left out a considerable wealth of
questions and answers. My claims can be summed up in the following
paragraphs.
Firstly, I have tried to demonstrate that the concept of relativism as
commonly held is misinterpreted and misconstrued, and does not doom us with
paradoxical or regressive arguments that should play in favor of absolutism. As
such, relativism and absolutism may be but two ends on a spectrum, not an
either/or dichotomy. (Non archaic and non radical) relativism is compatible with a
practical realism, and does not entail that there should be no moral truths,
whereas absolutism rests on unjustifiable metaphysical and epistemological
positions.
Secondly, the issue of an irreconcilable normativity and descriptiveness
brought upon by seemingly absolutist claims of different lineages need not worry
us for much of the same reasons drawn from epistemology and metaphysics.
The possibility of autonomous ethics has been thus demonstrated (time and
again) to be nigh impossible, as with any autonomous research area concerning
the sciences of the living anyhow. The very vocabulary inherited by moral
thought has to keep up with contemporary epistemology and metaphysics, as in
the departure from a criterial view of our knowledge of the world to embrace a
realism of constraints on this knowledge.
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Thirdly, much of ethics having to do with reason, concepts and agency,
which are the domain of empirical cognitive sciences, we are naturally led to
espouse a dependence of the former area of study on the latter. Not only does it
concur with our previous intuition of the well founded adoption of a correct
relativistic attitude towards knowledge, it eradicates the false pretenses of
autonomous and absolutist ethics, along with the unsupportable claims on the
necessity of untainted normativity by descriptive concerns.
Lastly, the pertinence of ethics is in no way questioned here. What was
dealt with here is about the relativity of ethics to its empirical foundations, of (at
least) cognitive importance. It is a reassessment of ethics epistemological and
ontological commitments. This relativity of ethics does not portray ethics as a
failure or ill-fated enterprise, it informs it and constrains it in more realistic ways.
What we might try to achieve is a non-reductive naturalistic realism of ethics,
much in the same way that cognitive sciences resist reductionism and aim to a
rigorously scientific treatment of what might be said to be true about human
mind, behavior and agency.
Future work may go even further than a psychological and cognitive
endeavor to rest ethics in scientific realism. I believe it to be possible to shed
some light on some real and relevant constraints on moral thought and action
within the realms of even lower levels of scientific complexity, from evolutionary
biology down to dynamic systems theory.
A morality which cannot be revised as new discoveries about the mind are made
known is a dead morality incapable of meeting the kinds of change that are part
of human existence.
Mark L. Johnson
1998
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